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-- Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland“we’re all mad here. I’m mad. You’re mad.” ;
“How do you know I’m mad?” said Alice, “You must be,” said the Cat, “or you wouldn’t ' have come here.”
Alice didn’t think that proved it at all; however, she went on; “and how do you know that you're mad?”
“To begin with,” said the Cat, “a dog’s not mad. you grant that?”
“I suppose so,” said Alice.
“Well, then,” the Cat went on, “you see a dog growls when it’s angry, and wags its tail when it’s pleased. Now I growl when I’m pleased, and wag my tail when I’m angry. Therefore I’m mad.”
“I call it purring, not growling,” said Alice.
“Call it what you like,” said the Cat.
Oh my gosh. I never found Friends funny and I was so confused why everyone loved Friends. Now it all makes sense.
I found Big Bang Theory somewhat funnier but I liked the science stuff as well.
Living in Britain, this island is obsessed with sarcasm and irony. It's pretty wearing having to translate it all the time. I remember the first time someone explaining it to me and thinking what is the point of saying the opposite of what you mean? (I do understand now)I can get obvious jokes like knock-knock. I can get puns, albeit a little slowly. But sarcasm is not something I can get, I interpret it literally 95% of the time. And most adult jokes are along the lines of being sarcastic.
After everything I've been through, I try to be not-repressed, and to laugh at whatever, or yell something out whenever, and it's evident to me I have no idea whether I't going to come out too loud or too doofy until I do it, and that's fine. At least I know myself, and I don't have to wonder why I'm always on my own. There's a reason. Not a good one, but whatever. You can always hope to meet someone else who is the same, but not if you don't put yourself out there as you are.People would often wonder if I liked what they were watching because I would never laugh even if I got the joke. This disguises wether I got it or not! In general it is hard to get me to do more than a very quiet snort. Probably because comedies are overwhelming for me. When I was young I would look to see if my brother would laugh to know when to laugh. That annoyed him.
It depends on the type of comedy. "Friends" is striking to me because it was a type of comedy which was wildly popular, and which, as a hearing person; I'm pretty much completely "deaf" to that kind of comedy. I perceive it as people laughing endlessly for no discernible reason. Partly, you can chalk that up to the use of "LAUGH" signs with studio audiences, but it fails to explain how the show lasted ten seasons. The lesson can be boiled down to diversity. Also, go find a kind of humor that's funny to you. I think Monty Python is hilarious. There are lots of standup comics who are very funny to me, but it's a more conceptual kind of humor. "Friends" is all gestures and facial expressions, and for me, it brings into relief where a blindspot of mine must be. It's startling how much I do not get it.I had always thought my inability to enjoy comedies was a deaf thing (I assumed the humor was in the delivery), but I polled my deaf social media group and they like comedies just fine. Live and learn.
I don't get a lot of subtle jokes in tv shows,things like friends and Seinfeld are beyond me but slapstick and obvious like on the buses I get
Makes sense, and yes, Friends/Seinfeld were the most difficult comedies for me also. HIMYM too. Monty Python movies are probably the funniest movies I've seen. I liked Hot Shots and Problem Child as a kid, but these are pretty slapstick/obvious.It depends on the type of comedy. "Friends" is striking to me because it was a type of comedy which was wildly popular, and which, as a hearing person; I'm pretty much completely "deaf" to that kind of comedy. I perceive it as people laughing endlessly for no discernible reason. Partly, you can chalk that up to the use of "LAUGH" signs with studio audiences, but it fails to explain how the show lasted ten seasons. The lesson can be boiled down to diversity. Also, go find a kind of humor that's funny to you. I think Monty Python is hilarious. There are lots of standup comics who are very funny to me, but it's a more conceptual kind of humor. "Friends" is all gestures and facial expressions, and for me, it brings into relief where a blindspot of mine must be. It's startling how much I do not get it.